Friday, April 29, 2022
GENERATING AND DISPOSING OF HAZARDOUS MATERIALS HERE IN MESA
Not saying much about that subject, but 4 recent press releases from the City of Mesa newsroom don't dig deep enough into that subject
Hazardous chemicals responsible for recent garbage truck fires
April 26, 2022 at 1:00 pmThere has been a recent uptick in garbage truck related incidents over the last 30 days caused by the placement of household hazardous materials in trash and recycle containers. The first incident involved the placement of muriatic pool acid...
JX Nippon Mining & Metals completes $29 Million 65-acre land acquisition in Mesa, Arizona to strengthen its semiconductor materials business
April 4, 2022 at 10:57 amJX Nippon Mining & Metals USA, Inc., an industry leader in semiconductor materials, announced the completion of a $29 Million land acquisition deal in Mesa, Arizona. The 65-acre greenfield site will serve as JX’s new base of operations for its...
Fujifilm Completes Expansion of its Mesa Facility to Supply the Semiconductor Industry
March 30, 2022 at 7:27 amFUJIFILM Electronic Materials, U.S.A., Inc., a leading supplier of chemicals and advanced materials for the semiconductor industry with four manufacturing and R&D sites across the U.S., today announced that it has completed its $88 million...
JX Nippon Mining & Metals completes $29 Million 65-acre land acquisition in Mesa, Arizona to strengthen its semiconductor materials business
April 4, 2022 at 10:57 amJX Nippon Mining & Metals USA, Inc., an industry leader in semiconductor materials, announced the completion of a $29 Million land acquisition deal in Mesa, Arizona. The 65-acre greenfield site will serve as JX’s new base of operations for its...
TODAY IS ARBOR DAY HERE IN MESA...Let's Reality-Check on that "Happy Talk" Press Release
Neighborhood Meetings for Public Input for Transform 17
Mesa residents will be able to provide input on the proposed plans for Transform 17. The project includes a mixed-use neighborhood of residential, office and community retail at the southwest corner of Mesa Drive and University Drive.
The City of Mesa did a whole lot of 'shoveling' lately - in the fringes of the Inner and Outer Loops in northeast and southeast Mesa while more than one vacant eyesore has plagued the NWC intersection of Main & Country Club Drive where a Valley Metro Light Rail platform has been in operation 3 years - it's that infamous Bailey's Brake Service site the city of Mesa wanted to seize using Eminent Domain.
The perspective in this image provided shows the expanse of the sight with the 15-story assisted-living facility Courtyard Towers looming in the background
It's what city officials and city staff want to use again - what they say ingenuously "is a matter of public necessity".
Hard to believe city officials are trying to pull off this stunt again after the debacle and fiasco 10 years ago trying to seize Bailey's Brake Service by using Eminent Domain. That blew up big time when Mike Wallace exposed it nationwide on the Sunday Night Prime Time investigative reporting show Sixty Minutes.
Arbor Day celebrating 150 years of planting trees
April 25, 2022 at 12:00 amOn April 29, the City of Mesa, along with communities across the U.S., will celebrate Arbor Day. This year is especially meaningful as it marks the 150th anniversary of the tree planter’s holiday. The first official Arbor Day, celebrated in Nebraska in 1872.
Celebrating 12 Years as a Tree City USAMayor John Giles issued an Arbor Day Proclamation designating Friday, April 29 as Arbor Day. This is just one of the requirements of being named a Tree City USA community by the Arbor Day Foundation.
Arbor Day celebrates and promotes the significant role trees play in our urban environments. Not only do trees help clean the air and water, but even more importantly, they provide shade that helps to create cooler, walkable connections from neighborhoods to school, work, or transportation routes.
By celebrating Arbor Day, we show that our community values trees not just for their beauty but for their numerous health and environmental benefits. Contact: Mariano Reyes
(480) 644-5005
Mariano.Reyes@mesaaz.gov
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CIA PLAYING CARDS....Tell Me Again What was That
Clearance Sale: Last Chance To Get Our Boxed Version Of The CIA’s Training Card Game
from the going-fast dept
Last chance to get your boxed copy of CIA: Collect It All!
If you’ve been around Techdirt for a while, you’ll probably recall that almost exactly four years ago, we launched our Kickstarter for CIA: Collect It All.
This was our version of an internal CIA training card game, called “Collection Deck” that was partially released in response to a FOIA request. The release included heavily redacted cards. We redesigned the cards to make them much nicer, and then came up with our own scenarios and CIA methods to fill in the blanks where the redactions had been.
The Kickstarter was quite successful, with over 4,000 people supporting the project.Over the years since then, we’ve continued to sell the game in various places. We’re now down to just a few copies left of our original printing, and we don’t currently have plans to print any more. The remaining copies are for sale on Amazon at a steep discount as we try to clear out our last remaining copies.
This may be your last chance to get a boxed copy of the game, so please check it out!
Already got one? Get a backup copy! Or buy one for a friend.
The underlying game is public domain and the other elements are released under a Creative Commons license, so you can still download the files to print and play if you’d like. However, having a professionally produced boxed version of the game is quite a different experience.
Get Your Copy Of CIA: Collect It All Before They’re All Gone!
Filed Under: cia, collect it all, collection deck, public domain, training gam
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Thursday, April 28, 2022
THE CYBERWARFARE RANGE - Everywhere and All The Time
Intro: It's always something, and sometimes we don't know
Microsoft says Russia hit Ukraine with hundreds of cyber attacks

"Microsoft has revealed the true scale of Russian-backed cyberattacks against Ukraine since the invasion, with hundreds of attempts from multiple Russian hacking groups targeting the country's infrastructure and Ukrainian citizens.
These attacks also include the use of destructive malware designed to take down critical systems and disrupt civilians' access to critical life services and reliable information.
"Starting just before the invasion, we have seen at least six separate Russia-aligned nation-state actors launch more than 237 operations against Ukraine – including destructive attacks that are ongoing and threaten civilian welfare," said Tom Burt, Microsoft's corporate vice president for customer security and trust.
"The destructive attacks have also been accompanied by broad espionage and intelligence activities. [..] We have also observed limited espionage attack activity involving other NATO member states, and some disinformation activity . .
Russia Is Being Hacked at an Unprecedented Scale
From “IT Army” DDoS attacks to custom malware, the country has become a target like never before.

The orders are issued like clockwork. Every day, often at around 5 am local time, the Telegram channel housing Ukraine’s unprecedented “IT Army” of hackers buzzes with a new list of targets. The volunteer group has been knocking Russian websites offline using wave after wave of distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks, which flood websites with traffic requests and make them inaccessible, since the war started.
Russian online payment services, government departments, aviation companies, and food delivery firms have all been targeted by the IT Army as it aims to disrupt everyday life in Russia. “Russians have noticed regular hitches in the work of TV streaming services today,” the government-backed operators of the Telegram channel posted following one claimed operation in mid-April.
The IT Army’s actions were just the start. Since Russia invaded Ukraine at the end of February, the country has faced an unprecedented barrage of hacking activity. Hacktivists, Ukrainian forces, and outsiders from all around the world who are taking part in the IT Army have targeted Russia and its business. DDoS attacks make up the bulk of the action, but researchers have spotted ransomware that’s designed to target Russia and have been hunting for bugs in Russian systems, which could lead to more sophisticated attacks.
The attacks against Russia stand in sharp contrast to recent history. Many cybercriminals and ransomware groups have links to Russia and don’t target the nation. Now, it’s being opened up. “Russia is typically considered one of those countries where cyberattacks come from and not go to,” says Stefano De Blasi, a cyber-threat intelligence analyst at security firm Digital Shadows.
At the start of the war, DDoS was unrelenting. Record levels of DDoS attacks were recorded during the first three months of 2022, according to analysis from Russian cybersecurity company Kaspersky. Both Russia and Ukraine used DDoS to try to disrupt each other, but the efforts against Russia have been more innovative and prolonged . . .
While Kaspersky’s analysis says the number of DDoS around the world has returned to normal levels as the war has progressed, the attacks are lasting for longer—hours rather than minutes. The longest lasted for more than 177 hours, over a week, its researchers found. “Attacks continue regardless of their effectiveness,” Kaspersky’s analysis says. (On March 25, the US government added Kaspersky to its list of national security threats; the company said it was “disappointed” with the decision. Germany’s cybersecurity agency also warned against using Kaspersky’s software on March 15, although it didn't go as far as banning it. The company said it believed the decision was not made on a technical basis.)
[ ] While cyberwarfare throughout the conflict may not have been as obvious or have the impact some predicted, many incidents may happen without publicity or outsider knowledge. “I think the most sophisticated operations going on right now are espionage—to find out what the opponent is trying to do, wants to do, and will do next,” De Blasi says. “We may have to wait years before we discover anything about that.”
. . .
While cyberattacks against Russia have increased, there are hints that this may push the country further down the path of internet isolation. For the past few years, Russian officials have talked of creating its own sovereign internet and breaking away from the global system. When the DDoS attacks started, Russia appeared to geofence government websites, and at the start of March, according to national media reports, the country’s Ministry of Digital Development told websites to improve their cybersecurity measures and keep control of their own domain names.
“I believe that full disconnect from the internet would still be an extreme approach, even now,” says Lukasz Olejnik, an independent cybersecurity researcher and consultant. “Furthermore, the government is apparently still in a kind of self-denial, acting as if nothing significant was happening due to the cyberattacks, or even due to the Western sanctions, too.” Despite this denial, Olejnik says, the country is still “doubling down” and pushing toward its long-term goal of a sovereign internet."
Reference: https://www.wired.com/story/russia-hacked-attacks/
RELATED Source: https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/
Ukraine targeted by DDoS attacks from compromised WordPress sites
Ukraine's computer emergency response team (CERT-UA) has published an announcement warning of ongoing DDoS (distributed denial of service) attacks targeting pro-Ukraine sites and the government web portal.
- Bill Toulas
- April 28, 2022
- 11:38 AM
0
New Bumblebee malware replaces Conti's BazarLoader in ccyber attack
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A newly discovered malware loader called Bumblebee is likely the latest development of the Conti syndicate, designed to replace the BazarLoader backdoor used to deliver ransomware payloads.
- Ionut Ilascu
- April 28, 2022
- 07:45 AM
0
Microsoft says Russia hit Ukraine with hundreds of cyberattacks
Microsoft has revealed the true scale of Russian-backed cyberattacks against Ukraine since the invasion, with hundreds of attempts from multiple Russian hacking groups targeting the country's infrastructure and Ukrainian citizens.
- Sergiu Gatlan
- April 27, 2022
- 02:09 PM
1
Russian govt impersonators target telcos in phishing attacks
A previously unknown and financially motivated hacking group is impersonating a Russian agency in a phishing campaign targeting entities in Eastern European countries.
- Bill Toulas
- April 27, 2022
- 11:32 AM
0
Chinese state-backed hackers now target Russian state officers
Security researchers analyzing a phishing campaign targeting Russian officials found evidence that points to the China-based threat actor tracked as Mustang Panda (also known as HoneyMyte and Bronze President).
- Bill Toulas
- April 27, 2022
- 08:38 AM
0
Cartoon Carousel The nation’s cartoonists on the week in politics | By POLITICO STAFF 01/23/2026 05:00 AM EST
Every week political cartoonists throughout the country and across the political spectrum apply their ink-stained skills to capture the fo...
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Flash News: Ukraine Intercepts Russian Kh-59 Cruise Missile Using US VAMPIRE Air Defense System Mounted on Boat. Ukrainian forces have made ...









